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-- D.F. Manno | dfma...@mail.com "Faith is a cop-out. If the only way you can accept an assertion is by faith, then you are conceding that it can't be taken on its own merits." (Dan Barker, former preacher, musician, b. 1949)
On Nov 3, 10:31 pm, oscarmad1049 <oscarmad1...@gmail.com> wrote:
> On Nov 3, 10:28 pm, Postal68 <oweny...@gmail.com> wrote:
> > and even Brucie's boy lost.
> > Looks like Obama is heading for one and done
> Is this anything like your guarantee that the Yankees would win in 5? > Or that the E Street tour was over? Or that you actually had a job?
I didn't say the Yankees would win in 5. I said whoever wins game 3 wins the series. The Yankees won game 3, they will win the Series.
I didn't say the tour was over. I said I was hearing that they may end the tour. I also heard that Vini Lopez would be playing on the last night at the SPectrum. How'd that work out?
I don't have a job..anymore. I have been living off of my inheritance from my godmother. I never have to work another day in my life.
Sour grapes and poor losers...but losers all the same.
Barack Obama will be re-elected in an "unprecedented landslide". When all is said and done, and the perspective of history views his accomplishments, he will be regarded as one of our greatest Presidents'. Of course after eight years of idiot Bush that in and of itself doesn't set the bar all that high.
And remember, in the words of Michael Steele, Chairman of the Republican National Committee...."we are the party of no ideas" and "we are the party of no". To me that pretty much says how it is, and he should know.
Thank God, which ever God you believe in, for Barack Obama.
On Nov 4, 12:46 am, "bp7260" <bill_phill...@verizon.net> wrote:
> Sour grapes and poor losers...but losers all the same.
> Barack Obama will be re-elected in an "unprecedented landslide". When all > is said and done, and the perspective of history views his accomplishments,
I guess they going to view his "accomplishments" the same way the Nobel Committee did.
On Nov 4, 8:04 am, Postal68 <oweny...@gmail.com> wrote:
> On Nov 4, 12:46 am, "bp7260" <bill_phill...@verizon.net> wrote:
> > Sour grapes and poor losers...but losers all the same.
> > Barack Obama will be re-elected in an "unprecedented landslide". When all > > is said and done, and the perspective of history views his accomplishments,
> I guess they going to view his "accomplishments" the same way the > Nobel Committee did.
You cheer when the president starts a war, but boo when he gets an award for peace.
Wow, Bush really fucked things up beyond belief.....
On Nov 3, 10:28 pm, Postal68 <oweny...@gmail.com> wrote:
> and even Brucie's boy lost.
> Looks like Obama is heading for one and done
Here in NJ there was no way that Corzine was going to win. He had too many things going against him (but I voted for him anyway). Corzine's disapproval rating was at 52%, NJ's unemployment was the highest in the region, and under Corzine we stayed at No. 1 for highest property taxes in the nation - a distinction we've had for years and years. So it's no surprise that even with Obama's support that Corzine lost. Even if Jesus Christ himself and come down and said "Vote for Corzine or else" Corzine would have lost. I'm just surprised it was as close as it was.
The governorship races are no indication of how the nation will vote in 3 years.
However if you want one indication, look to upstate NY's lone US Congressional contest. In a district that has been in Republican hands since Ulysses S. Grant was president, the DEMOCRAT won. It appears that the original Republican candidate, a moderate, wasn't conservative enough for the base and got forced off the ticket and was replaced with a hard-line conservative who lost. For the Repubs to unseat Obama they need to figure out which arm of the party (moderate or conservative) will decide their direction.
> Sour grapes and poor losers...but losers all the same.
> Barack Obama will be re-elected in an "unprecedented landslide". When all > is said and done, and the perspective of history views his accomplishments, > he will be regarded as one of our greatest Presidents'. Of course after > eight years of idiot Bush that in and of itself doesn't set the bar all that > high.
> And remember, in the words of Michael Steele, Chairman of the Republican > National Committee...."we are the party of no ideas" and "we are the party > of no". To me that pretty much says how it is, and he should know.
> Thank God, which ever God you believe in, for Barack Obama.
> "Postal68" <oweny...@gmail.com> wrote in message
> On Nov 3, 10:28 pm, Postal68 <oweny...@gmail.com> wrote:
> > and even Brucie's boy lost.
> > Looks like Obama is heading for one and done
> Here in NJ there was no way that Corzine was going to win. He had too > many things going against him (but I voted for him anyway). Corzine's > disapproval rating was at 52%, NJ's unemployment was the highest in > the region, and under Corzine we stayed at No. 1 for highest property > taxes in the nation - a distinction we've had for years and years. > So it's no surprise that even with Obama's support that Corzine lost. > Even if Jesus Christ himself and come down and said "Vote for Corzine > or else" Corzine would have lost. I'm just surprised it was as close > as it was.
> The governorship races are no indication of how the nation will vote > in 3 years.
> However if you want one indication, look to upstate NY's lone US > Congressional contest. In a district that has been in Republican hands > since Ulysses S. Grant was president, the DEMOCRAT won. It appears > that the original Republican candidate, a moderate, wasn't > conservative enough for the base and got forced off the ticket and was > replaced with a hard-line conservative who lost. > For the Repubs to unseat Obama they need to figure out which arm of > the party (moderate or conservative) will decide their direction.
You got a lot of nerve posting an intelligent, thoughtful, even insightful political post on RMAS. Having said that, I think NY-23 shows why Obama has a very good chance of getting elected to a second term. Having so many "important" Republicans endorse a Conservative over the Republican candidate shows the infighting is just starting. Palin, Pawlenty, Huckabee, and Romney (eventually) all abandoned the Republican. Imagine this on a larger scale, as the next election rolls around and the Palin group thinks they should pick true-redcandidates and the Republican establishment wants to pick people who have a chance of winning. This will be a battle between the Tea party zealots and the old established Republican party, and the winner will most often be the Democrat as the people in the middle abandon the Rs.